Manoj Kumar Pandey

Officer

Birthday June 25, 1975

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Sitapur, Uttar Pradesh, India

DEATH DATE 1999-7-3, Bunker Ridge, Khalubar, Batalik Sector, Kargil, Ladakh, India (24 years old)

Nationality India

#35994 Most Popular

1975

Captain Manoj Kumar Pandey, PVC (25 June 1975 – 3 July 1999) was an Indian military officer posthumous recipient of India's highest military decoration, the Param Vir Chakra, for his audacious courage and leadership during the Kargil War in 1999.

Manoj was born on 25 June 1975 in Rudha village, in the Sitapur district of Uttar Pradesh.

He was born to Gopi Chand Pandey, a small-town businessman living in Lucknow, and Mohini.

He was the eldest child, and was educated at Uttar Pradesh Sainik School, Lucknow and Rani Laxmi Bai Memorial Senior Secondary School.

He had a keen interest in sports with boxing and body building in particular.

1990

He was adjudged the best cadet of junior division NCC of Uttar Pradesh directorate in 1990.

Prior to his selection, during his Services Selection Board (SSB) interview, the interviewer asked him, "Why do you want to join the Army?"

He replied, "I want to win the Param Vir Chakra."

Captain Manoj Kumar Pandey did win the country's highest gallantry honour but posthumously.

He graduated from the National Defence Academy in 90th course and belonged to Mike Squadron (Mustangs).

1997

Pandey was commissioned as a lieutenant in the 1st battalion, 11th Gorkha Rifles on 7 June 1997.

In early May, the intrusion in the Kargil sector was reported.

The 1/11 Gorkha Rifles battalion had finished a one-and-a-half year tenure in the Siachen Glacier and was on-the-move to its peace-time location in Pune.

The battalion was asked to move to the Batalik sector in Kargil.

It was among the first units to be inducted into this sector.

The unit, commanded by Colonel Lalit Rai, was assigned responsibility of the Jubar, Kukarthaam and Khalubar areas and their battalion headquarters was in Yeldor.

Pandey, as part of the battalion, was involved in a series of attacks, including those which led to the capture of Jubar Top.

Manoj Pandey died securing the Dras Valley.

In early July, 'B' Company of 1/11 GR was assigned the task to capture Khalubar top.

Pandey was commanding a Platoon in this company.

Quickly sizing up the situation, he killed two enemy personnel and destroyed the second position by killing two more.

Although wounded in the shoulder and leg, he pressed on his solitary charge with serious determination, until he closed in on the first bunker.

The two armies engaged in a ferocious, hand-to-hand combat.

The troops charged at the enemy and fell upon them.

Undaunted and without caring for his grievous injuries, he continued to lead the assault on the fourth position urging his men and destroyed the same with a grenade, even as he got a fatal burst on his forehead.

He collapsed at the final bunker and succumbed to his injuries.

The Param Vir Chakra citation reads as follows:

1999

On the occasion of Independence Day 1999, a month after the war ended, the President of India approved the award of the Param Vir Chakra to Pandey and three others - Captain Vikram Batra, Rifleman Sanjay Kumar and Grenadier Yogendra Singh Yadav.

2000

His father, Gopichand Pandey, received the award from the President of India K. R. Narayanan during the Republic Day Parade in New Delhi on 26 January 2000.

Pandey is one of the 21 individuals who have been decorated with India's highest military honour.

As a PVC awardee, his statue is at the Param Yodha Sthal at the National War Memorial.

After his death, multiple places have been named after him including his almae matres.

Rani Laxmi Bai Memorial Senior Secondary School

UP Sainik School

National Defence Academy

Services Selection Board, Allahabad

'''Capt. Manoj Pandey Memorial Sports Stadium, at Garkon

Captain Manoj Kumar Pandey, who hailed from the state of Uttar Pradesh, led his troops in the capture of Khalubar Hills in the Batalik sector during the war.

He bravely fought against enemy forces and gave up his life while defending his country's borders.

2011

An officer of the first battalion in the 11th Gorkha Rifles (1/11 GR), he died in battle on the bunker hill edge of the Khalubar Hills in the village of Garkon Aryan Valley in Kargil.